Diffusion would most likely be responsible for the movement of glucose from inside the artificial cell to the solution outside of the cell. Glucose molecules will move from an area of higher concentration (inside the cell) to an area of lower concentration (outside the cell) to reach equilibrium.
It recirculates the air inside. If it brought in humid outside air, you would shortly have a meganormous mold problem.
If substance A can diffuse across the membrane, it will move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration until equilibrium is reached. This means that the concentration of A inside the cell will increase while the concentration outside the cell will decrease, assuming that the initial concentration outside the cell is higher than inside. Eventually, the concentrations inside and outside the cell will become equal if no other factors interfere.
If vesicles were missing, cellular transport and communication would be severely disrupted. Vesicles play a crucial role in transporting proteins, lipids, and other materials within cells and between different cells. Without them, essential processes like secretion, endocytosis, and recycling of cellular components would be impaired, potentially leading to cell dysfunction and death. Additionally, absence of vesicles could hinder the proper functioning of neurotransmitters in neurons, affecting signal transmission.
Because the movement of the gas-molecules inside the freezer are smaller, and therefore, that more molecules are present in a given volume inside the freezer.. If the temperature of the air outside the freezer, was the same as inside the freezer, the air outside and inside would have the same density - roughly said - because the humidity inside the freezer also plays a role. But in general the above is enough to answer your question.
Exocytotic vesicles typically contain molecules such as hormones, neurotransmitters, digestive enzymes, or other proteins that need to be released from the cell. These vesicles fuse with the cell membrane to release their cargo outside of the cell through the process of exocytosis.
Outside - if they were inside, you would be blinded by the light.
The student tried to hypothesize what would happen if the two chemicals were combined.
You would find the area of the inside and outside shape (pretending that the inside shape was not in the outside shape). then, you would take the area of the outside shape and subtract the area of the inside shape.
Well the first question you need to ask yourself is: what makes something inside and what makes something outside...The actuall building would be outside but the inside of would...obviously...be inside...but it depends if you have a built in garage or one that is not attached to your house, one attached to a house would be inside
It is on the outside, because it is used to prevent people from entering the castle. If it was on the inside, there would be no use for it.
rocks?
Outside. (But if the entire sentence is a parenthetical like this one, it would go inside.)
Well it depends where outside or inside. Like, if it was in the library then that would be a good choice. For me it's my room or the library.
Stay inside.
Maggots
They are a network of stacked membraneous vesicles that facilitate secretions inside a living cell, so unless your house is alive they would not be any part of it.